I got in some more cutting today. Looking for advice opinions on the tree you see leaning in the pic. I got a feeling notching it might be a bad idea. All the ash trees are dying the ash borer got them all. This one is next on the list maybe. Im sure it has a little rot in the middle the one next to it did my concern with the way its leaning and the weight toward the one side if it does have a little rot things could get hairy So notch it or just start cutting till it starts going over your thoughts its the one further back in the pic
Barber chair? Sorry, if I sound like a newb. That one looks like if you notch it, then backside cut that it may start coming down before you get to the back. Maybe a really shallow notch, then go to the back side? Would a plunge cut on the back be safer? Just trying to learn more
Oh god. Yeah, that's bad. So, in that case either the barber chaired tree, the notch wasn't really made at all, just a single cut. All that energy had to go somewhere. I've always notched trees the direction I mean to drop them.
Thats what im hoping to avoid. Im going to do some more studying on it still i have others to cut too I can come back to it later
I have one even worse than this one. It looks like a backward C and its leaning too. I will take a pic of it
Put a very open and shallow notch on the compression side. Like 100-120 degrees. Bore cut if you can or back cut very carefully and get the heck out as soon as you can if you hear or see any movement. Leaner=killers!!!
1+ I like this notch description. If I think the center of the hinge is weakened by rot I'll leave the hinge thicker than normal. With a leaning Ash I do not do anything except a bore cut.
I like mike b's description too. You definitely don't want to get to far in on a wedge cut. I payed attention in school during physics class. Good stuff.
Not saying or recommending my style over any others but with leaners I like to make a shallow notch and use the coos bay triangle cut.